Who is Farrah El-Dibany, the mezzo-soprano who interpreted the “Marseillaise” at the Champ-de-Mars after Emmanuel Macron’s speech?

She had the honor of concluding the speech of Emmanuel Macron, freshly re-elected president, after the speech delivered at the Champ-de-Mars. The Egyptian mezzo-soprano Farrah El-Dibany sang The Marseillaise, Sunday April 24, at the end of the speech of the tenant of the Elysée. The latter had arrived on this emblematic Parisian place, where the Eiffel Tower sits enthroned, to the sound ofOde to Joyfrom Beethoven’s 9th symphony, the European anthem.

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Born in Alexandria, Farrah El Dibany is the first Egyptian and Arab opera singer to have joined the Paris Opera Academy (in 2016), explained Radio France three years ago. “When you sing opera, you have to attack the note and not come from below. For oriental music, and even pop music, on the other hand, we often start below and we do a portamento [glissement d’une hauteur de note à une autre] reverse”she explained then. “It was not easy to change that because it comes naturally to me. When I sing with a lot of emotion, it comes back from time to time, but slightly.”

In June 2019, at the Hall de la chanson, in Paris, she also played the singer Dalida, her compatriot, during a recital of French song. In the same year, she also won the Arop Lyric Prize for Best Opera Singer.

The artist performed an excerpt from Carmenby Georges Bizet, during the award ceremony, a character she has often interpreted on stage, to the point, she says in a blog of the Worldto be “ecstatic” when she sings this role. Last March, Farrah El-Dibany was also decorated with the medal of the Order of Arts and Letters by the French ambassador to Egypt, Marc Baréty.


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